Not a stupid question, but if I post on c/asklemmy my post disappears.

Turn it on, motor runs for a minute until there’s water under pressure. Works fine until I let off the trigger, then the motor won’t start again for 3 days. Seriously, tried this a few times, takes 3 days until it will start again. Runs fine until I let off the trigger.

It’s like a sensor is saying, “We got water and pressure, cut the motor off.” To reset I think I have to take the hose off, not simply turn the water off. And wait 3 days. :(

All the troubleshooting I’m seeing revolves around power issues. Pulled to top off and yes, it’s getting voltage all the way to the motor wires. Doesn’t matter if I leave it plugged in or not. For sure not a power switch issue, tested with a multimeter.

If it helps, here is the model

EDIT: Found a YouTube short with comments saying replacing or cleaning the tip fixed it? Can’t try it tonight as I have to finish cleaning my carpet tomorrow and if it cuts off again it’ll be Tuesday until I can try again.

  • CameronDev@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    Does tapping it with a hammer help? Your probably right, and there is a pressure sensor getting stuck. Maybe try find it and tap it with a hammer to see if dislodges?

  • Frostbeard@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Might be a faulty valve in there somewhere that triggers a sensor.(can’t remember the details) I have a Stihl RE 129 plus (think it’s just a rebranded Nilfisk tbh) that did the same thing, only I just had to let it rest for 5 minuted as water drained from whatever it was that caused the shutoff.

    Have it serviced is my advice. Sorry I can’t remember I detail what was wrong with mine.

  • Lasherz@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Probably worth a warm soap soak or maybe vinegar treatment to reduce any calcium build up in the head. Electrical-wise you could bypass the circuit to power the motor and see if it spins okay with either a variac or a variable dc power supply depending on what motor it is. If it still stalls then could check brushes/any gearing jammed up. If it doesn’t stall then I suspect a overcurrent or thermal protection circuit is triggering. Could be corrosion on the board, a heatsink coming loose, or simply a jam you can’t see. Lots of possibilities, but people who work specifically on these would know more about the most likely things.

  • Blade9732@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I have never seen that exact issue, but almost all electric washers I have used end up having a problem with the washers own GFCI breaker on the end of the cable (small box near the plug end that has a reset switch on it). I would use your multi meter and check to see if you are still getting a full 110 from the cable, before the motor, after it turns off on your first use. Those plugs can stop power without tripping the exterior switch on them, then randomly work again. The solution is to cut that off the power cord at the GFCI and wire in a new one or just a plug. If you use just a plug, you will have to make sure it is only plugged into an exterior, working GFCI for safety. They add those for extra safety, as not everyone has a protected outside circuit. Exterior gfcis can also fail and still pass power but not work correctly and trip off. Those small, cheap plug in testers have a button on them that allows you to test any GFCI by tripping it and then you reset manually to confirm function.

    • shalafi@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Cut the GFCI end off almost as soon as I got it. Those circuits on cheap power washers trip if you breath too loudly.

  • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Is it plugged into a socket rated for 120VAC/20W? Is there a ground fault on that socket (a fault, not a GFCI sensor, although that’s also a consideration)?

    Is it connected to a rigid hose (not one of those collapsible ones)?

    Have you tried using it with the motor turned off? Do you get a steady stream of water with no air bubbles?